The exhaust was moved forward to provide a more reliable, if weakened, effect on the diffuser.
TechF1lies wrote:Exhaust pipes have been moved further forward, thus reducing their effect, but the position was likely to cause excessive sensitivity to depressing the accelerator pedal, which is why there is an instability.
The problem is still with ride height sensitivity and the oscillations due to the diffuser stalling, recovering, stalling...bouncy bouncy. Scarbs talked about it on Windsor after Malaysia. I don't know if 'stalling' is really correct, but at least there's a phase where it's not affective, for whatever reason. The reason I say that is because it worked well when the car was set too low, which seems a bit counterintuitive. Seems more likely to me that there's a low point at which the diffuser 'catches', but the car is right on the edge of that point so the effect is easily broken by a bump, or by braking, turning, driving in traffic etc. - pretty much all that
stuff you do when racing.
Regardless, the suspension is practically rigid to try to deal with it all, and no doubt they'd soften it if they could. Too bad the tires can't be made rigid, too. So moving the exhaust forward is surely a step back in terms of outright downforce, but of course it helps the stability, which has a greater effect on performance at the moment. Perhaps we'll see it moved back again as part of the Barcelona package?
AMuS says that the reason McLaren got the rear tires wrong is because they deform differently on the current car than on last year's. As a result, the test they did in Brazil last year apparently sent McLaren down the wrong path. And supposedly they aren't the only ones with the same problem, with both Williams and Sauber having similar issues.
http://translate.google.com/translate?s ... 20110.html
Motorsport Total says that the package they ran this weekend hadn't seen the wind tunnel. The Barcelona package has a monopoly on the tunnel for now. Seems that McLaren are determined not to repeat the mistake they made in '09 when they went all out on early upgrades as opposed to taking their time to do a solid fix in Spain. It's interesting also that they say that McLaren were too conservative with the tires this weekend, and could have pushed Jenson harder had they known.
http://translate.google.com/translate?s ... 41445.html
It will definitely be a different car in Barcelona. Hopefully better, too.
Just_a_fan wrote:@Pup: there's a fair bit of flex in the tea tray leading edge too by the look of it in that slow-mo video
Cheaters!